Selected images from "Our House" project (Actual pieces are life-sized)

Monday, December 11, 2006

Arthur--Painter and Fortune Teller


This is a portrait of “Arthur” that I completed just two days ago (5x3 feet). Arthur is a homeless man who spends his time painting on wood and canvas. His pieces range from small (3x12 inches) to large (10x6 feet). His paintings are interesting, but I first got to know him when he had inherited an old set of tarot cards and was trying to make a few bucks telling fortune.

At the time, I wanted to learn how to read palms and tarot cards, so I thought I might learn a few things from him. I really don’t think he had much experience with tarot cards. The cards were just something he was given and he was mostly improvising with great sincerity. I didn’t learn anything useful but I did appreciate his effort and commitment in something he wasn’t well versed in. It was as if I were to pick up a deck of tarot and immediately set up a stall to tell fortune with no previous experience at all… Something I would never have the guts to do, and something I could never do a hundreth as well as he did. So I appreciated his flair and hustle.

Since that time, we have become friends. I have not interviewed him however. I just feel as if he’s the type of person who hides deep, personal feelings behind his jolly, cheerful exterior. I don’t feel like I’m at the point of being able to penetrate his facade. Perhaps one day I might… Then I will ask him to tell me his stories…

Jose V.


This is another “retro-post” of a portrait I completed in late October this year. It is a portrait of “Jose.” The actual shoot was taken a few months ago, but only recently had I finished the life-sized (7x3 feet) composite piece. Of all the people I have photographed and interviewed, Jose was the one who had the most impact on me. This was for many reasons: One was that this man has high spiritual energy. He’s like a charismatic shaman lost in the mass of homelessness. Second was that this man has gone through hell and abuse from as early as three years old. That he turned out to be such a gentle spiritual man (instead of a angry psycho) never ceases to amaze me.

My interview with him lasted more than eight hours, spread over four separate days. I felt an honor that he would sit with me and tell me his most personal stories. The exchange was exactly what I quest for in what I do in art or anything else in my life. As Carlos Castaneda would say, the exchange was a “gesture” between him and me. And we sat in truth for a few moments in time.

Mother/Father Piece


This blog was started to document the progression of the art project "Our House," but having gotten into the spirit of blogging, I feel that this is an excellent way to record my overall artistic progress and development, and also a good way to reposit any major ideas and inspiration relevant to all my ongoing projects--not just "Our House."

So to make this blog more complete, I will enter a few “retro-posts”--posts that refer to a few important points in time that happened before the beginning of the blog.

This particular post refers to the above piece of my mother and father (3x6 feet, done in early November this year). The working title of the photograph is “My father left us for greener pastures, fresher faces, and a new family. Forty years later, mom met him again at a convalescent home… I felt a light, and it opened me.”

The title is long, but I felt it had to be so because the photograph will have more impact if the backstory is somehow conveyed to the viewer: When I was child, my father was a successful and thriving businessman in Malaysia. In the Chinese culture of the time, it is common for successful men to have mistresses on the side. And when I was six, for whatever reasons known only to him, he decided to leave our family to pursue a larger business empire, a younger wife, and a new family.

Anyways, to make a long story short, about forty years later my dad was put into a convalescent home by his latest family. We got a call informing us of his whereabouts. So my mother, my sister, and I went to visit him. This is a picture of their first meeting in forty years.”

When I was there, there was an opening of light, an opening of enlightenment in me. It was a special moment in my life and, I’m sure, in my mother’s as well.

Monday, December 4, 2006

"Religion" - Readymade and Sound Sculpture


I had gotten an email notification of a DADA/Surrealism/Readymade/Found-Object art show, and it occurred to me that this could be a good venue to put out my first “sound-sculpture baby” to the art world at large and see how it is received or rejected. The entry deadline was only a couple of days away so I mostly cloistered myself within this project this last week and finished it a few hours ahead of the deadline.

The title of the piece is “Religion”. It comments on Consumerism as the all-encompassing religion of America. A lot has been studied and written about Consumerism as a religion, for those who are interested in reading a sample of these available on the internet, I have listed a few links at the end of this post.

“Religion” is a piece about the “voices” of things. Phenomenologically speaking, the things we interact which are imbued with meaning. Objects speak to us with the voices that are given to them in our daily interactions with the world at large. In American culture, advertising is the foremost authority that gives voice to the objects all around us. These voices are “transparent” in that we are not conscious of what is spoken but, unconsciously, they speak clearly to us of promise: The promise of validation, recognition, acceptance, status, love, happiness… On the other hand, they also speak of lack, shame, inadequacy, rejection, and outcast. These voices pass, unfiltered, into our subconscious and they echo transparently inside heads. What they say is unheard, until they are translated into our interior dialog, which are then spoken with authority and heard clearly as the voice of our inner self.

“Religion” gives clear voice to the three shopping bags colored red, white, and blue. The voices are made opaque and there is no denying them any longer. The sculpture of the sound is made like echoes that reverberate from the universal static signal of advertising.

In the piece, a pair of speakers is hidden in the bags, and the sound (10 minutes) is run on a continuous loop. As an update on the previous "sound system" post, I’d say I’m generally happy with the entire system. The sound quality is equivalent to my current home stereo, which is of a fairly decent quality. It won’t blow any audiophiles away, but it will get the sound-sculpture job done. The only obvious complaint is that the fan of the power amplifier is rather noisy. Which might pose a problem when I start experimenting with live sound; I’m sure the mics will pick up the fan noise with no problem at all. But, hey, it was a cheap power amplifier…

Below, I list three web articles that talk more about Consumerism as a religion: (I can't seem to be able to make the web addresses into links. So please just copy the lines and paste to the browser address field. Sorry.)

http://www.planetpapers.com/Assets/1618.php (“The Myth of Consumerism”)

http://www.rochesterunitarian.org/2000-01/20010729.html (“The Religion of Consumerism”)

http://www.thepanamanews.com/pn/v_07/issue_09/opinion_04.html (“The Religion of Consumption”)

Thursday, November 30, 2006

Sound System


Anticipating the need to eventually supply a sound system for my show, as well as for any other pieces that may incorporate sound, I decided to put together a basic rack-mounted system that will play decent sound in a average-sized show space. Looking at discount internet suppliers, I put together a system that will be used for the three following scenarios:

1) Continuous looping of a CD track (of the sound sculpture) for the entire duration of the gallery show.

2) For use with art pieces that I may produce that will incorporates the use of sound design.

3) To “sculpt” live sound in public-art sound sculptures that I hope to do in the future.

Considering the usage, the requirements of the system should be as follows:

1) Because the system will be left in the galleries and operated by gallery staff, it should be easy to use. Meaning that it will have to have a CD player (and not have to be played via a computer laptop--which will be too complicated).

2) Relatively portable, with enough power to fill a good sized show space with undistorted sound. This means rack-mounted components all set up in one portable case. And small, but high quality, speakers (which I already have).

3) My preliminary experiments with altering live sound produced scary levels of feedback. I know I have a lot more learning to do here. Regardless, I decided to buy a feedback eliminator unit to put in the rack. Maybe it will help. We'll see...

Anyways, there was a good sale last week at one of the internet suppliers, so I put in the order, and the components have been coming in one at a time via UPS and FedEx. Mostly, these are lower-end, prosumer components that don’t cost as much as high-end audiophile units. I hope the resulting sound quality will be good enough. Will report more when the whole thing is put together.

Monday, November 27, 2006

Artist Statement


(above: Portrait of "Woman at Swap Meet")

Today, I tried to put together a new artist's statement with the sound sculpture component added to it. I'm posting it to elicit any comments or recommendations. Any responses on what works, what doesn't, and what it lacks are totally welcome (and will be much appreciated). Here is the draft:

"In my continuing search to understand what it means to be in this world, I have come to the realization that, for me, we live in a world of people--and not a world of places. Ever since then, the work I’ve been doing has come to be an experiencing of this world of people through photography and personal interviews. The art that has come out of this exploration is the multi-media form of the “Human Landscape” done through photographic portraits and sonic sculptures of human sounds.

In the photographic component, I try to present the power of the individual without any adulteration or artificial gloss. They stand towards the camera without being posed, and they stare back at the viewer without a smile or other generic expressions elicited by traditional portraiture. The rest of my photographic process also reacts against the traditional, modernist standards of the medium that I feel severely limit the creativity and expression of the artist. The notions of the perfect print, consistent surface treatment, and idea of the flawless “fine photograph” presented immaculately behind glass is deconstructed. The result is a post-modern approach to photography: images sometimes clear, other times choppy, blurry; the works are composited from smaller prints to form larger pieces glued onto canvas, and are then tacked to the walls without glass protection. The presentation and feeling of the pieces necessarily have to reflect the feeling of the real world in that it has the textures, the flaws, and the accessibility of real lives of real people.

My ongoing project “Our House” is a multi-media exhibition based on photography and sound sculpture. The impetus behind the project is the modeling of the “Human Landscape” as I see it. In addition to the visual, I have added the auditory to form a greater gestalt of the human condition. The aural component consists of a sound sculpture rearranged from the recordings of interviews and other organic vocal sound clips of humanity. Like the photographic imagery, the sound component sculpts the aural with new textures in new auditory contexts, creating for the viewer/listener new ways of seeing, and new ways of listening."

Saturday, November 25, 2006

La Jetee / Meditation


(above: Image frame from "La Jetee")

Scoped around the internet and checked out what the web had of the French “film” La Jetee. The various short (7 to 9 minutes) segments found on YouTube was actually different parts of the larger film which totals 28 minutes. Made in 1962, by Chris Marker, La Jettee is “made from a series of stills and a voice-over narration that tells of experiments carried out on a prisoner in the underground camps to which everyone has been forced after the holocaust of World War III. The experiments will purportedly save humanity by sending "emissaries" into both the past and the future to bring back help. The experimental subject (the film suggests this is the narrator himself) is chosen because of his obsessive attachment to an image of the past½a young woman on the quay (la jetée ) at Orly Airport when he was young. Under the auspices of the experiment, he reaches the past and spends time with this woman; but he is then brought back by the experimenters and sent to the future. The people of the future offer him refuge with them, but instead he asks them to return him to his past, to the quay at Orly and to the woman--and, as it turns out, to his own death.”

This is a strangely beautiful film. The black-and-white still images are superbly done, capturing the essential imagery of the narrative. It is as if we went through a well-shot film frame-by-frame, and then frame captured the best still images that told the story, then threw away the rest of the frames. Because of the lack of traditional film/video motion, this film, to me, sort of exists in that twilight zone between still photography and film. Sort of in the same “zone” where Fiona Tan’s video art piece "Corrections" can be found in the categories of my mind.

Where "Corrections" haunts us with the play of imagery, La Jetee’s power was in its total immersion in word/voice and image. And as strong as the still images are, the film mostly hits us with the sound of the human voice speaking the human word. The sound and narration is just absolutely beautifully done. Sort of like a sound sculpture of an individual human being, in contrast to what I want to do—which is a sound sculpture of the entire human landscape.

Another interesting thing about "La Jetee" and "Corrections" is that they both have a unusual meditative quality to them. Something that I find in neither the still photography or video/film media. For "La Jetee", it is as if the still imagery halts the mind from moving forward in the narrative. In doing that it stills the mind while, on the other hand, requires the mind to do more work with the imagination. The result is a more mindful and meditative viewing/listening. I feel this is a good effect, especially for my project.

I’m going to get my hands on the full-length version. Let the feeling of the piece (of the sound) settle inside of me. Definitely will provide an influence on “Our House.”

Internal Dialog


(above: Portrait of "Sharyn")

What is the sound of our internal dialog? Is it spoken in whispers? Or spoken in the sound of our natural voice? How loud or soft is it? Does it have a sound? Do we hear it, or do we feel it?

If I wanted to, how do I represent/present it in the sound sculpture? Would I represent it as a focal, fringe, or horizonal element? A fringe, white noise? Or something else completely?—not even in the realm of speech?....

Don Ihde's "Listening and Voice"


(above: Portrait of "Kevin")

**Warning: Very long post.

I read the book “Listening and Voice,” by Don Ihde. Good book. Interesting. Cuts right into the phenomenon of sound, listening, and voice. A book about listening phenomenologically, and about phenomenological voice. The listening part was germane to my project; very applicable. The voice part more theoretical and less practical in relation to the elements I will be working with. I will quote various passages I found useful. And after each quote, I will comment on how I saw it relate to my photographic/sound-art project “Our House.”

“… But the latent reduction TO vision became complicated within the history of thought by a second reduction, a reduction OF vision.”

(Comment: Author points out the historical emphasis on our vision sense, relegating the aural sense to a secondary or neglected status. But, later, author notes a renewed focusing on the this neglected dimension-)

“This deliberate change of emphasis from the visual to the auditory dimension at first symbolizes a hope to find material for a recovery of the richness of primary experience which is now forgotten or covered over in the too tightly interpreted visualist traditions.”

(Comment: Particularly relevant to visual arts. Visual=Visualist=overlooking the richness of the auditory dimension.)

“… there is an old and deeply held tradition that vision “objectifies,” and, contrarily but not so widely noted, there is also a tradition which holds that sound “personifies.”

(Comment: Seems true when applied to my project “Our House.” The individual portraits, as much as I try to present it in a human scales, the portraits nonetheless are objects of portraiture. It is the stories of the subjects, when heard, gives us the human side of the various images. The stories told of them and their lives gives the work the “human feeling.” Conversely, it puts the viewer/listener into this wider “human landscape.”)

“… In this sense a “pure” auditory experience in phenomenology is impossible, but, as a focal dimension of global experience, a concern with listening is possible. Auditory experience can be thematized relatively, in relation to its contextual appearance within global experience. But just as no “pure” auditory experience can be found, neither could a “pure” auditory “world” be constructed. Were it so constructed it would remain an abstract world.”

(Comment: This, in a way, confirms my feeling that my work is not so much a combination of photography and sound sculpture, but that it is one whole piece of multi-media work. The question has been asked as to my reason to add the auditory element to my photography, and I have responded with a myriad of good reasons, but ultimately, the visual and aural elements was meant to be one work from the beginning—even though I had not known it at first. Perhaps that is why I had conducted the interviews even before I had begun the photographic collection of the imagery. Sound/voice does not exist in itself in a human landscape, nor does the visual/imagery. More of this below:)

“The mute object stands “beyond” the horizon of sound. Silence is the horizon of sound, yet the mute object is silently present. Silence seems revealed at first through a visual category. But with the fly and the introduction of motion there is the presentation of a buzzing, and Zeno’s arrow whizzes in spite of the paradox. Of both animate and inanimate beings, motion and sound, when paired, belong together. “Visualistically” sound “overlaps” with moving beings… With a sound a certain liveliness also makes its richer appearance. I walk into the Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris for the first time. Its emptiness and high arching dark interior are awesome, but it bespeaks a certain monumentality. It is a ghostly reminder of a civilization long past, its muted walls echoing only the shuffle of countless tourist feet. Later I return, and a high mass is being sung: suddenly the mute walls echo and reecho and the singing fills the cathedral. Its soul has momentarily returned, and the mute testimony of the past has once again returned to live it the moment of the ritual. Here the paired “regions” of sight and sound “synthesize” in dramatic richness.

(Comment: … The aural adding richness to the visual.)

“I cannot see the wind, the invisible is the horizon of sight. An inquiry into the auditory is also an inquiry into the invisible. Listening makes the invisible present in a way similar to the presence of the mute in vision.”

(Comment: Paraphrasing… “I cannot see their lives, the invisible is the horizon of what I see in their eyes. An inquiry into their stories is also an inquiry into their interior landscape. Listening to the sound of their voices is similar to being present in “the lanscape.”)

“It is with a third spatial signification that this “richness” begins to appear, for stronger than shapes and more distinct than surfaces, I hear interiors. Moreover, it is with the hearing of interiors that the possibilities of listening begin to open the way to those aspects which lie at the horizon of all visualist thinking, because with the hearing of interiors the auditory capacity of making present the invisible begins to stand out dramatically. To vision in its ordinary contexts and particularly within the confines of the vicinity of mute and opaque objects, things present themselves with their interiors hidden. To see the interior I may have to break up the thing, do violence to it. Yet even these ordinary things often reveal something of their interior being through sound.”

(Comment: The author was referring mostly to geometric/inanimate objects. But we can succinctly extrapolate this to human subject. That the voice and stories told allow us to glimpse at one’s interior condition the way no visual image can allow.)

“The city dweller hears the clink of the coin on the subway platform even as the train approaches, and the jungle dweller hears the whisper of the adder in spite of the chatter of the monkeys and parrots. I can select a focal phenomena such that other phenomena become background or fringe phenomena without their disappearing… Moreover, this attention is keyed into the personal-social structures of daily life in such a way that there are habitual and constant patterns of appearance to those things which normally remain fringe phenomena and those which may be focal. I go to the auditorium, and , without apparent effort, I hear the speaker while I barely notice the scuffling of feet, the coughing, the scraping noises. My tape recorder, not having the same intentionality as I, records all these auditory stimuli without distinction, and so when I return to it to hear the speech re-presented I find I cannot even hear the words due to the presence of what for me had been fringe phenomena. The tape recorder’s “sense data” intentionality has changed the phenomena.”

(Comment: Our mind is amazing efficient, it focuses on what is necessary and the rest—the fringe phenomena—is filtered out without us being even conscious of it. This filtering takes a lot of the richness out of our auditory environment. One way to restore the richness is to be aware and listen. The other way is to produce sound in such a way that is so out-of-the-ordinary that the mind has no choice but to pay attention. This is the mode I have to follow as I sculpture the sound for my show. It is to short-circuit the habitual mind, and to restore listening in its original, full potential.)

“Here an enigma of the auditory field emerges from these two dimensions of field spatiality; for the global, encompassing surroundability of sound, which is most dramatic and fully present in overwhelming sounds and the often quite precise and definite directionality of sound presence which is noted in our daily “location” of sounds, are both constantly co-present. For the description to be accurate, both surroundability and directionality must be noted as co-present. This “double” dimensionality of auditory field characteristics is at once the source of much ambiguity and of a specific richness which subtly pervades the auditory dimension of existence… The contrast of the musical experience with everyday listening points to two such variations of focal attention. Quite ordinarily, sounds are taken directionally. The hammering from next door is heard as from next door. The sparrow’s song in the garden presents itself from the garden. But if I put myself in the “musical attitude” and listen to the sound as if it were music, I may suddenly find that its ordinary and strong sense of directionality, while not disappearing, recedes to such a degree that I can concentrate upon its surrounding presence.”

(Comment: In other words, our habitual listening automatically assigns surroundability and directionality to specific sounds we are used to hearing. If we can sculpt normal sounds in a way that is different from the norm, our intentions may be altered to allow a different kind of listening to happen. Hence one of the goals of the sound in my project will be to present the organic sounds of humanity in a new “artistic” way as to create a new listening intention and, hence, a new phenomenological listening.)

“Both these qualities of sound are used simultaneously in what is a most normal human activity, face-to-face speech. The other speaks to me in the “singing” of the human voice with its consonantal click-like sounds and its vowel tonalities. It is a singing which is both directional and encompassing, such that I may be (auditorily and attentionally) immersed in the other’s speech. Yet the other stands before me. Speech in the human voice is between the dramatic surroundability of music and the precise directionality of the sounds of the things in the environment.”

(… Taking it another step further, looking at the “words” that are spoken in speech:)

“Words do not draw attention to themselves but to the intended things in referring. This extends ordinarily even to the form of embodiment in which the language is found. Thus in speaking, what is ordinarily focal is “what I am talking about” rather than the singing of the speech as a textured auditory appearance. This is not to say that the singing of speech is absent; it is present but as background which does not ordinarily call attention to itself.”

(Comment: The above passages define the component characteristics of human speech. Having now found a handle on the respective components, I can consciously manipulate sound/speech ever so slightly as to alter the listener’s perceptual habit, to put the listener’s intention just that much off kilter. The objective being to create a new awareness of sound/speech experience. [Up until now, I had only been playing with sound/speech intuitively, not really know exactly what I was manipulating.])

“The purity of music in its ecstatic surrounding presence overwhelms my ordinary connection with things so that I do not even primarily hear the symphony as the sounds of the instruments… This ecstacy is also the occasion for an illusory phenomenon, the temptation toward the notion of a pure or disembodied sound. In the penetrating totality of he musical synthesis it is easy to forget the sound as the sound of the orchestra and the music floats through experience. Part of its enchantment is in obliteration of things… the experience of musical ecstasy and the way in which musical sound does from a gestalt.”

(Comment: This describes more clearly one of the original goals I had in mind. The goal of creating a sound sculpture with similar effect of white noise. Whereby the chronological sequence of storytelling need not be followed; whereby the voice is collaged very much like my photographic pieces are collaged. Whereby the final gestalt comes to more than the sum of the individual pieces put together.)

“It is in the ordinary babbling traffic which we have with others where the ambiguous richness of sound is both directional and encompassing that there is revealed a special kind of “shape.” This is what may be call an auditory “halo” or the auditory aura. The other, when speaking in sonorous speech, presents himself as “more” than something fixed, “more” than a outline-body, as a “presence” who is most strongly present when standing face to face. It is here the auditory aura is most heightened.

(Comment: In “Our House,” the life-sized portraits are photographed with eyes looking back at the viewer: This is the face-to-face auditory aura, the visual heightening the aural…)

“The experience of an auditory aura is “like” the experience of music in which intentionality though keenly aware, “lets be” the musical presence so that the sound rushes over and through one. But it is not like music in that the temptation to become disembodied, to allow oneself to float away beyond the instrumentation is absent. Rather, in the face-to-face speaking the other is there, embodied, while exceeding his outline-body, but the other is in my focus as there before me face to face. It si in his speaking that he fills the space between us and by it I am auditorily immersed and penetrated as sound “physically” invades my own body.”

(Comment: As the sound sculpture penetrates and invades the viewer/listener, the aural heightens the effect of the visual portrait imagery. A synergy of the aural and visual.)

“Conversely, the sudden absence of sound can disembody a scene. In the movie The Battle of Britain, a Technicolor reenactment of the air battles over England during World War II, at the height of the decisive battle Spitfires and Hurricanes dance in the air in combat with Messerschmitts and Junkers. Amidst the loud chatter of the machine guns and the roar and sputter of the airplanes and sound track is suddenly and deliberately silenced. At the instant of the disappearance of animating sound, he scene becomes eerie, a moving tableau which becomes more abstract and distant. This momentary irreality of the disengagement of sound allows the battle to be seen as a strange dance without music. Emptiness which can be uncanny is silence in the auditory dimension.”

(Comment: Interestingly, in my first experiment with sound for my show, I did not even consider the use of any silent moments. I feel, now, that silence can be a valuable element to be experimented with to see if it will add to the sound sculpture.)

“There is a leap made by metaphysics. When the limits of sense are reached, it posits an un-sensed sense; when the limits of consciousness are reached, it posits an unconscious-consciousness; when the chain of causes threatens to proceed to infinity, it posits an uncaused-cause.”

(Comment: This is the gestalt of the viewer/listener, how it forms, where it goes… extends to infinity…)

“The horizon is that most extreme and implicit fringe of experience which stands in constant ratio to the “easy presence” of central focusing. There is also a resistance offered by the horizon. It continually recedes from me, and if I seek for sounds and the voices of things, I cannot force them into presence in the way in which I may fix them within the region of central presence. I must await their coming, for sounds are given. But when they are given they penetrate my awareness such that if I wish to escape them I must retreat “into myself” by psychically attempting to “close them out.”

(Comment: I noted this passage because of the way it describes so well the nature of sound. The way it moves from presence to fringe. to perceptual horizon. How sound is given. How it penetrates and pervades. This passage give me a new vocabulary and a new way to envision the sounds I am manipulating.)

“There is a “depth” of things which is revealed secretly in all ordinary experience, but which often remains covered over in the ease with which we take something for granted.”

(Comment: For my first sound experiment, I edited together a 7-minute piece with sections of interviews I consider significant. With more thought, however, I now feel that the human condition is revealed by the significant as well as the insignificant. The “big” and “small” are equal, and all things are equally important, and equally unimportant. I think I will rescan and relisten to the interviews, now with an ear to the mundane as well as exceptional. And include all to use in counterpoints and contrasts.)

“Auditorily this hidden depth is silence. In its relative horizonal features silence lies hidden along with the sounding which presents itself… Silence is the “other side” of sound. Relative “absences” of sound have often enough been understood to belong properly to “meaningful” auditory experience. The pauses, or rests, in musical phrasing add to rather than subtract from the totality of the music. In speech silence often indicates either the stopping of a line of thought or a transition, but silences can also be filled with their own significations… Such adherences within relative silence enrich with auditory depth things and others. Even mute things may “speak” in a silence which carries the adumbrated adherence of sound to presence.”

(Comments: Passage elaborate more on said depth and silence.)

“I look at the postcard which arrived recently from Japan. It depicts four peasants running from a sudden rainstorm. They hunch under grass hats and mats as they seek shelter from the wet coldness of the rain. And if I look intently at the picture, perhaps mindful of the dictates of a Zen passage read long ago, I detect the adherence of a certain auditory presence to the picture. I “hear” the rain and “listen” to the peasants running and to the rustling of the mats. The muteness of the picture “sounds” in its relative silence.”

(Comments: I always felt the people in my portraits “spoke” in some way when they stared back at me. Having spoke to them, I could hear the “auditory adherences” the author talked about. But for the viewer/listener who had not the benefit of being in the conversation, this auditory experience is absent. This is where the sound sculpture can help create the adherence and construct the environment of the human landscape. Here we are speaking of the visual giving the aural cues, but I have to add here that I see a converse effect at work as well. That the aural can give visual clues. I believe the ‘thinking’ process works in two steps: One is that we hear our thought verbally, and the second is that we then envision the thoughts we hear visually. If that is so, then the envisioning we experience internally could possibly be triggered by a verbal and aural stimulation that is external in nature. Hence the addition of a vocal and verbal sound element to the photographic portraits can add an extra visual (internal envisioning) experience to the viewing of the artwork. This visualization/envisioning is spoken of—in the auditory equivalent—by the author as the “imaginative mode.” Below, quoting:)

“With the introduction of a secondary modality of experience—the Imaginative Mode, in addition to what has been the predominantly perceptualist emphasis, listening becomes polyphonic. I hear not only the voices of the World, in some sense I “hear” myself or from myself. There is in polyphony a duet of voices in the doubled modalities of perceptual and imaginative modes. A new review of the field of possible auditory experience is called for in which attention would be focused upon the co-presence of the imaginative.”

Comment: (See previous comment.)

“Existentially things “speak.” Heidegger has pointed out, “Much closer to us than all sensations are the things themselves. We hear the door shut in the house and never hear acoustical sensations or even mere sounds. In order to hear a bare sound we have to listen away from things, divert our ear from them, i.e., listen abstractly.” The things of the world sound in their own way. Things, others, the gods, each have their voices to which we may listen. Within auditory experience there is this primacy of listening.”

(Comment: Just as visual art is about new ways of seeing. Sound art is about new ways of listening… And how to bring about these new ways.)

“My “self” is a correlate of the World, and its way of being-in that World is a way filled with voice and language. Moreover, this being in the midst of word is such that it permeates the most hidden recesses of my “self.”… Language also lies in the interior. Inner speech as the hidden monologue of thinking-in-a-language accompanies the daily activities of humans even when they are not speaking to each other. The voices of others whom I hear immerse me in a language which has already penetrated my innermost being in that I “hear” the speech which I stand within. The other and myself are co-implicated in the presence of sounding word… Phenomenologically I already always stand in this center. The voices of language surround me wherever I turn, and I cannot escape the immersion in language. The voices of language have already penetrated all my experience, and this experience is already always “intersubjective.” And if this experience of the omnipresence of language which comes from others and which settles even into the recesses of myself is “like” the experience of surrounding, penetrating, pervasive sound, it is because its ordinary embodiment lies in the listening and speaking which embodies the voices of language. Voice is the spirit of language.”

(Comment: The sound sculpture part of the human landscape is about all the organic sounds made by humanity. They are whispers, mumblings, cries, squeals, speech, and even silence. But, mostly, it is about voice, the story the voices tells, and the spirit behind the stories. The listeners will have never heard the stories before, but everything will be familiar, for we are necessarily already in the landscape. As the images attempt to present a new way of seeing to the viewer, the sound sculpture a new way of listening, the entire work will attempt to present a new way of experiencing the human landscape.)

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Background


(above: Portrait of "Keetowah")

Since this is my first post, I think it will serve everyone well that I give some background information. I have been in communication with Ron Saito in the Art Department of California State University, Northridge, consulting with him on the usage of sound in addition to photography in my show. Below is the copy of the email which lists many of the germane ideas of the sound and imagery of "Our House."

**********email copy**********

Hi, Ron. Since you’ll be listening to the sample audio I gave you today, it occurred to me that it would help (both you and me) if I gave you a “statement”, so you know what I’m trying to do. So you can listen with that perspective and give me the feedback from there as well. (BTW, as I’ve finished writing this, I’m finding it is a pretty long email. Just a pre-warning…)

Firstly, I want the audio to have the same character as my photographs. My photography reacts rather strongly against the traditional expectation of photography that the works be immaculate, flawlessly produced and presented, and to have an easily perceived surface style/treatment that is seen as cohesive. As a result, my photographs are not mounted traditionally nor framed under glass. Some might be color, some black-and-white, some toned, some in matt surface, some gloss… on and on. The cohesiveness is under the surface. For me, the focused theme is the intent, and substance, and subject of the work: Which is people, and the texture of life, presented without gloss. The images are sometimes blurred, sometimes choppy; the overall feeling is of roughness (as opposed to smooth)--just like the lives we live.

So as far as the feeling of the audio is concerned, one of the goals is to have the same feeling as my photographs.

Beyond that, the interviews, to me, are actually more important that the photography of the people. The goal of what I do is for me to learn about life (I’m telling everything, knowing that I will finally censor what is politically unacceptable in the art arena) in its varied, unbelievable forms. I somehow believe that if I ask the right questions to the right people, they will unknowingly reveal to me some facet to the deeper answer to the “mystery”. I cannot verbalize this mystery I’m feeling, I just am sure of the feeling of mystery in a non-verbal sense. So, in what I do, I’m in a constant search for people who will talk, and in a constant search to match up the correct questions for these people. It is a search that never arrives in a resolution, but the quest is amazingly meaningful and truthful in its traveling.

I tell a lot of my subjects the truth of my work, and that is the order of importance of the three facets of what I do: Most important is for me to meet the person and engage in a personal and deep “story-telling”. (Not in those exact words, because that would scare them off.) Second in importance is the recorded interview. Third is the photography. Really, the work, for me, is complete if the discussion takes place, even without the recording or photography. (For some subjects, I let them think the latter two are what I’m after.)

Anyways, the other goal of the audio is to give the lives of the subjects more texture than just the visual.

Yet another goal is to give the viewer aural/verbal clues to stimulate the visual imagination (or internal visualization) of the viewer in terms of the people in the portraits.

The final goal would be, I guess, to create a gestalt that reflects how I see this world of people (not places). As you said, the final show should give the viewers a good inkling of the “model of my head”.

OH, as for LISTENING VOLUME: The volume should be at a level just high enough to hear the exposition and sonic effects easily, but not as loud or overwhelming like a movie theatre soundtrack. The average person would call the volume level: “… a tad soft, but just loud enough to hear everything okay.”